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Robert J. Sandusky
PhD Candidate, Library and Information Science,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
“INFORMATION MANAGEMENT IN SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT:
VARIETIES, CONTEXTS,
PROCESSES AND SOCIAL ORDER"
Monday,
March 1, 2004
11:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Room 403, IS Building
Abstract: This project addresses the
question of how free and open source software development
communities manage knowledge and activity as they address
software problems. Software problem management is a process
common to virtually all software development projects.
I approach software problem management as an organizational
process through the close examination of bug reports
from the bug report repository maintained by a large
open source software development project. Using grounded
theory techniques and by performing content analysis
on the bug reports themselves, I am identifying the varieties
of phenomena present in the bug reports and proposing
relationships between those phenomena.
In this presentation, I will highlight some of the phenomena
that have been found, including information, activity,
context, process, and social order. For example, the
community often links different bug reports together,
creating bug report networks that simultaneously change
both the information order and the social order. I will
also show how software problem management work can be
interpreted using theories of coordination and cooperation,
sensemaking, and negotiation. Finally, I will present
future directions for this line of research, including
application of this approach to other distributed collective
practices, and the potential impacts of this research
on tool development and software problem management practice. | |